Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviations
- List of boxes, tables and figures
- List of contributors
- 1 Basic skills and competencies in liaison psychiatry
- 2 The liaison psychiatry curriculum
- 3 Classification and diagnosis
- 4 Capacity and consent
- 5 Psychological reaction to physical illness
- 6 Medically unexplained symptoms
- 7 Alcohol and substance use in the general hospital
- 8 Accident and emergency psychiatry and self-harm
- 9 Perinatal psychiatry
- 10 General medicine and its specialties
- 11 Liaison psychiatry and surgery
- 12 Neuropsychiatry for liaison psychiatrists
- 13 Psycho-oncology
- 14 Palliative care psychiatry
- 15 Sleep disorders
- 16 Weight- and eating-related issues in liaison psychiatry
- 17 Disaster management
- 18 Liaison psychiatry and older people
- 19 Paediatric liaison psychiatry
- 20 Primary care and management of long-term conditions
- 21 Occupational medicine
- 22 HIV and liaison psychiatry
- 23 Sexual dysfunction
- 24 Psychopharmacology in the medically ill
- 25 Psychological treatments in liaison psychiatry
- 26 Research, audit and rating scales
- 27 Service models
- 28 Developing liaison psychiatry services
- 29 Multiple choice questions and extended matching items
- Appendix 1 Specific competencies
- Appendix 2 Learning objectives with assessment guidance
- Index
17 - Disaster management
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2018
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviations
- List of boxes, tables and figures
- List of contributors
- 1 Basic skills and competencies in liaison psychiatry
- 2 The liaison psychiatry curriculum
- 3 Classification and diagnosis
- 4 Capacity and consent
- 5 Psychological reaction to physical illness
- 6 Medically unexplained symptoms
- 7 Alcohol and substance use in the general hospital
- 8 Accident and emergency psychiatry and self-harm
- 9 Perinatal psychiatry
- 10 General medicine and its specialties
- 11 Liaison psychiatry and surgery
- 12 Neuropsychiatry for liaison psychiatrists
- 13 Psycho-oncology
- 14 Palliative care psychiatry
- 15 Sleep disorders
- 16 Weight- and eating-related issues in liaison psychiatry
- 17 Disaster management
- 18 Liaison psychiatry and older people
- 19 Paediatric liaison psychiatry
- 20 Primary care and management of long-term conditions
- 21 Occupational medicine
- 22 HIV and liaison psychiatry
- 23 Sexual dysfunction
- 24 Psychopharmacology in the medically ill
- 25 Psychological treatments in liaison psychiatry
- 26 Research, audit and rating scales
- 27 Service models
- 28 Developing liaison psychiatry services
- 29 Multiple choice questions and extended matching items
- Appendix 1 Specific competencies
- Appendix 2 Learning objectives with assessment guidance
- Index
Summary
In recent years, increasing attention has been paid to the development of plans to deliver appropriate psychosocial care to those affected by disasters and other major incidents. General hospitals are central to any response and liaison psychiatry services are well placed to play a leading role in the development of appropriate plans. In this chapter the evidence regarding the psychosocial management of disasters will be reviewed and current guidance described.
Several studies have considered the prevalence of mental health difficulties following major incidents and disasters. Whalley ' Brewin (2007) performed a systematic review of individuals affected by disasters and reported a 30–40% prevalence of PTSD at 2 years. This review and other research confirms that a significant proportion of those affected by disasters do go on to develop a psychiatric disorder and that a larger number will experience immediate distress.
Early interventions
Considerable work has been undertaken to develop interventions that may prevent longer-term post-traumatic difficulties. There is very little data containing research to support the effectiveness of any specific early intervention, but they remain popular and are advocated by many people.
Early interventions have emerged from a variety of historical approaches. In the First and Second World Wars the proximity, immediacy and expectancy model was widely used for soldiers with acute combat stress (Kardiner ' Spiegel, 1947). In this approach, soldiers were taken away from the front line but kept close to the battle zone (proximity), treated as soon as possible (immediacy) and with a strong expectation of returning to duty (expectancy). A key objective was the operational one of returning soldiers to front-line duties, and an Israeli study has shown that soldiers with combat stress reactions treated in this way fared better than those who were not (Solomon ' Benbenishty, 1988). In the Second World War, General Marshall (1944), chief historian of the US army, advocated 7-hour debriefings on the battle field as soon as possible.
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- Information
- Seminars in Liaison Psychiatry , pp. 253 - 264Publisher: Royal College of PsychiatristsPrint publication year: 2012